Sarah H. Ludington
Sarah Ludington is an emerging scholar in the fields of free speech and privacy law. Her recent work examines the implications of tenure for the speech of professors and methods for deterring the misuse of personally identifiable information. She has also co-authored articles about the history of sovereign debt repudiation and the doctrine of odious debts.
Prior to joining the Campbell Law faculty, Ludington taught legal writing at Duke Law School and practiced law in Washington, D.C. and New York. She held two federal clerkships, for Harry T. Edwards of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and for Joyce Hens Green of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. She also has significant experience teaching literature and writing in secondary schools.
Ludington received her law degree from Duke Law School with High Honors and was inducted into the Order of the Coif. She received the Hervey M. Johnson writing prize for best published note, was a note editor of the law journal, and received the American Jurisprudence Award for Constitutional Law.
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Constitution and Courts
Civil Procedure
Media Law
Administrative Law
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J.D., Duke University School of Law
M.A., English, Duke University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
BA, English, Yale University
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Law practice experience More ▼
Associate, Lankenau, Kovner & Kurtz, New York N.Y.
Associate, Miller, Cassidy, Larroca & Lewin, Washington D.C
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Memberships & affiliations More ▼
Member, North Carolina Bar
Member, District of Columbia Bar
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Professional experience More ▼
2009 Professor: Duke-Geneva Institute in Transnational Law
Visiting Assistant Professor, North Carolina Central School of Law
Senior Lecturing Fellow, Duke University School of Law Close ▲
Applied Legal History: Demystifying the Doctrine of Odious Debts, 11 THEORETICAL INQUIRIES IN LAW 159, 2009 (forthcoming) (with Mitu Gulati and Alfred L. Brophy),
A Convenient Untruth: Fact and Fantasy in the Doctrine of Odious Debts, 48 VA. J. INT'L L. 595 (2008) (with Mitu Gulati)
Reining in the Data Traders: A Tort for the Misuse of Personal Information, 66 MD. L. REV 140 (2006)
In Praise of Public Access: Why the Government Should Disclose the Identities of Alleged Crime Victims, 41 DUKE L. J. 368 (1991) Close ▲
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CONTACT:
Sarah Hutt Ludington
Assistant Professor of Law
919-865-4678
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